The Post

‘Beast’ shows his softer side

- Ben Coles

Tendai ‘‘Beast’’ Mtawarira is halfway through responding to a question about how he wants to be remembered when his voice begins to tail off. The man who took Dan Cole to pieces in the Rugby World Cup final is reflecting not only on the most glorious of finishes to his internatio­nal career, but his 11-year associatio­n with the Springboks as a whole.

‘‘I want to be remembered as a guy who defied the odds. I came in as a young kid from Zimbabwe with nothing. Nobody knew me. I had to earn my place, firstly with the Sharks and then from there I kept on working hard. I never rested on my laurels.’’

Mtawarira’s eyes well up. He takes a moment, sitting back in his chair, composing himself. ‘‘Oof, I’m getting a little bit emotional here,’’ he admits – followed by a booming laugh.

It has been 11 days since the 34-year-old wore the Springboks jersey for the final time, appropriat­ely by delivering a scrummagin­g masterclas­s against England in Yokohama a decade on from his famous demolition job on Phil Vickery against the British and Irish Lions.

He is on his third continent in less than a fortnight, having arrived in London to play for the Barbarians against Fiji on Sunday (NZ time) after a national tour of victory parades across South Africa. After winning the Rugby World Cup and winning the last of his 117 test caps, there are still many moments and thoughts to process.

‘‘It is still surreal,’’ he says. ‘‘To realise we are actually world champions, it is amazing. What I have worked hard for my whole career. It has been my dream.’’

For the thousands upon thousands of supporters who have lined the streets of Gauteng, Durban, East London, Port Elizabeth and Cape Town since last week, just catching a glimpse of the trophy has been enough. South Africa has no shortage of domestic issues, but this is no time for downbeat curmudgeon­s. The mood of national celebratio­n should be savoured.

‘‘To see so many different people, different types of people, different races coming together and celebratin­g, crying in the streets, being emotional when they see that World Cup, it just means so much to everybody,’’ Mtawarira says.

‘‘Young kids out there, probably now aspiring to be Springboks. It brings a lot of hope to the people.’’

Mtawarira was in his first year as a profession­al with the Sharks when South Africa last won the Rugby World Cup in 2007, a few months after he had narrowly missed out on the Super Rugby title after a late Bryan Habana try for the Bulls.

Mtawarira has never left Durban, staying for a dozen seasons with the Sharks, without ever getting as close again.

‘‘I always give Bryan a hard time about that! Afterwards, it felt like a curse. We should have won it and then just could not get a title.’’

His time with the Springboks has been more fortunate, cementing the No 1 shirt in Japan by, as he puts it, working his backside off to be part of the squad.

Matt Proudfoot, the Springboks assistant coach, recalled after the final that Mtawarira had approached him in the build-up, asking: ‘‘What can I work on in my game?’’ After well over a century of caps, Mtawarira could have easily grown comfortabl­e. Not that it was in his nature.

‘‘You get to a certain stage where you are kind of comfortabl­e, playing test after test and you assume it is just going to happen. [Proudfoot] was always honest with me that I had to work harder, and he has always been my go-to after a game, asking him what I could do better, how I was in the set-piece.’’

Departing with his World Cup medal, Mtawarira leaves behind a Springboks side who he believes are now ‘‘more representa­tive of the nation’’. The 1995 Springboks-winning side featured one black player, the late Chester Williams. There were two in 2007 in wingers Habana and JP Pietersen. In Yokohama, Mtawarira was one of seven black Springboks, including Siya Kolisi, the captain.

‘‘Rassie [Erasmus, the head coach] came in and was honest, saying that he wanted to get the balance of the team right,’’ Mtawarira explains. ‘‘He was very honest with every player, which I guess was something we were lacking in the past, because most coaches are trying to run around various issues.

‘‘Rassie addressed the elephant in the room. Now you have guys in the team who are more than deserving of their jerseys, they have earned their places.’’

Back to that initial question regarding his legacy, there is a second part to Mtawarira’s answer, delivered after he pauses to reflect on an extraordin­ary journey.

The boy first given the nickname ‘‘Beast’’ in primary school, who arrived in South Africa from Harare, retires as a Springboks legend after a decade of adoring fans chanting that same nickname.

‘‘I want to inspire the young kid who has nothing, who comes from a tough background, who thinks that they cannot rise above their circumstan­ces. I want to inspire that kid. You can become great. You do not have to let your circumstan­ces define who you are. You can rise above them.’’

Few players get that fairytale finish. Equally, few have deserved it more.

– The Telegraph, London

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 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Springboks prop Tendai Mtawarira holds aloft the Webb Ellis Cup after South Africa beat England in the Rugby World Cup final in Tokyo.
GETTY IMAGES Springboks prop Tendai Mtawarira holds aloft the Webb Ellis Cup after South Africa beat England in the Rugby World Cup final in Tokyo.

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